DT Editors' Rating

Google’s Android Wear 2.0 update is slowly but surely making its way to existing smartwatches like Fossil’s Q lineup, but you may want to buy a new watch altogether after you’ve seen the Huawei Watch 2 Sport and Classic.

While we’re spoiled with fashionable Android Wear options this year after the Baselworld 2017 watch show, Huawei’s Watch 2 offers payments along with another feature that elevates the smartwatch above the weak competition — 25-day battery life.

Okay, you don’t actually get 25 days out of the Huawei Watch 2 while using Android Wear, but it’s still a killer feature for when you want to just have a watch that works without a nightly charge. The Watch mode feature massages a pain point that affects every smartwatch — short battery life.

The Huawei Watch 2 comes in two models, the Sport and the Classic, which are nearly identical in specs and design. The Sport model has a different band, and its international variant comes with LTE connectivity. We spent some time with the Huawei Watch 2 Sport, and although it’s the best Android Wear Watch to date, it’s clear that Android Wear still lacks a device that can compete with the Apple Watch.

After reviewing the behemoth of the LG Watch Sport, Huawei’s lightweight smartwatch is a refreshing change of pace, and it’s incredibly comfortable to wear. I hardly ever felt the need to take it off. It’s still not thin or small like the Apple Watch, but it won’t look strangely out of place on most people’s wrists, unlike LG’s sport model.

The seconds labeled on the large circular bezel of the Huawei Watch 2 do not serve any purpose, and it makes the front look cluttered. It’s partly why the watch looks a lot more like a regular sporty watch rather than a smartwatch. However, we think the original Huawei Watch still takes the cake as one of the best looking Android Wear devices.

The 20mm band is made of a silicone-like rubbery material, and while it’s comfortable on the wrist, the band feels cheap. Thankfully, the bands are easy to remove via a snapping mechanism, so you can swap it out for any band you choose.

Huawei’s lightweight smartwatch is incredibly comfortable to wear.

Our primary issue with the Huawei Watch 2’s design is tied to the physical buttons and the small screen. Android Wear 2.0 supports the use of a digital crown — a button you can rotate to scroll through the interface of the OS. It’s utilized in the LG Watch Style and Sport, but not on any of the Huawei Watch 2’s two buttons. That’s unfortunate, because my thumb encompasses nearly the entire screen and it’s often hard to see what I’m swiping through.

The screen is just too small. Huawei should have minimized the bezel to keep the same frame and then increased the screen-to-body ratio. A slightly bigger screen would offer more information from notifications at a glance and typing on the keyboard or scribbling letters wouldn’t be as tricky.

At least the vibrant screen as well as the 390 x 390-pixel resolution of the Huawei Watch 2 looks gorgeous. Colors are vivid, and the screen offers deep blacks. It’s also easily visible in direct sunlight.

Long load times, but Android Wear 2.0 runs well

their own apps. On the Huawei Watch 2, the experience is polished, and it runs well enough, thanks to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Wear 2100 chip and the 768MB of RAM.

Android Wear 2.0, a major revamp that overhauled the design of the OS, is a joy to use. Swipe down to access quick settings, and swipe up to move through your notifications.

You can respond better to notifications through tools like Smart Reply, which uses on-device machine learning to offer up contextual, short responses. Smart Replies have been useful, but voice-to-text and the keyboard (with swipe functionality) have been our go-to choices for responding to messages. You also get the option of an emoji or letter scribbler.

Flick your watch away from you to pull notification cards up, and flick it towards you to go back and even pull your settings down. These gestures are our favorite way of interacting with a smartwatch because it doesn’t require use of your other hand.

Watch Complications, which mimic subdials on a traditional watch, are also proving to be critically important in offering up information at a quick glance. You can program them to show details like the time to your next calendar event, how active you’ve been this week, and more. Third-party apps can add their own complications as well.

Android Wear 2.0 offers more control over the color scheme of a watch face and layout of the complications (you can also have none). The best part: If you have more than one favorite style, you can customize as many as you want and just swipe left or right to switch quickly.

For example, if I’m heading to a fancy dinner I’ll swap to a minimal, traditional-looking face with no complications. When I’m out and about, I’ll swap to one that more readily gives me important information. This is my favorite feature in Android Wear 2.0 — watch faces are important, and Google has done a great job in keeping the process of switching and customizing them incredibly simple.

Unfortunately, we’re still having a tough time of finding a lot of good watch faces that make use of complications other than the ones pre-installed on the watch. There’s still not a great deal of app support for version 2.0 yet, but we imagine things will look up as older devices get the update.

The stand-alone Google Play Store removes the need to download watch apps onto your phone; and the Google Assistant, which works by pressing and holding the top button, lets you ask it just about anything — from setting a reminder or navigating home to asking about the weather.

While the OS seems polished, everything seems to still take a few seconds to open and process. Google Assistant, for example, isn’t as fast and responsive as we’d like, and the Play Store also has somewhat long loading times. We think this is a connectivity issue, as we had similar issues on the LG Watch Sport.

Android Pay works well enough — just open the app and hold it up to the payment terminal. It still looks weird and draws unwanted attention, as people are still getting used to the fact that you can pay with something that’s not an iPhone.

Fitness features

The Huawei Watch 2 differentiates itself from the LG Watch Sport with more robust daily fitness statistics, and there’s a Workout app that launches tracking for select activities like indoor and outdoor cycling, running, and more. The tracking features seem to be on par with what Google Fit offers.

You can see data like your heart rate over the past six hours via a neat graph, your estimated VO2 capacity, and the app offers steady, useful reminders when you have been inactive for more than an hour. The one downside is that Huawei’s apps offer no automatic tracking features we’ve come to expect in a lot of fitness trackers. Google Fit does, though, and it’s strange to have two different fitness apps that offer similar but different features.

Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

There are also training guides available for certain workouts, but you need to download Huawei Wear and Huawei Health to make it work. Huawei Wear was easy to find and install, but we had trouble pairing with the app from a smartphone — it doesn’t look like support for the Huawei Watch 2 has been added. We had trouble finding Huawei Health on the Play Store. The company said it still has to finalize some of the software, so we’ll take another look and update this review when the watch is officially released.

The heart rate sensor and GPS seem to be fairly accurate in our testing. The good thing is if Huawei’s fitness apps or Google Fit isn’t doing it for you, you can always head to the Play Store to download an app of your choice, like Strava, and still make use of these sensors.

The watch is IP68-rated by the way, meaning you can take it underwater up to 1.5 meters for about 30 minutes. It’s not meant for swimming, unlike the Apple Watch Series 2, which is capable of tracking your laps in the pool. There’s also an array of other sensors you can make use of, like the barometer, gyroscope, accelerometer, and compass.

Battery life and Watch Mode

The Huawei Watch 2 Sport has a 420mAh battery that can more or less get you through a full day with light to medium use. I typically came home with about 30 percent or higher battery life using the watch, but that’s without using any fitness-tracking features, and leaving the GPS on.

Huawei’s watch offers another feature that elevates it above the weak competition — 25-day battery life.

While two-day battery life would be great in its own right, Huawei does offer an app called Watch Mode. Similar to Casio’s Android smartwatch, this essentially turns off Android Wear functionality and leaves you with an analog watch face, as well as your step tracking data. It’s the perfect way to “turn off” your smartwatch when you don’t need to use it, such as when you’re at your desk and your smartphone and desktop are readily accessible.

In Watch Mode, you can’t do anything other than check the time and your step count. Unfortunately, to bring back Android Wear functionality, you have to restart the watch, but we much prefer the ability to extend our watch’s battery life by 25 days than having to deal with dead smartwatch. We configured the bottom right button to trigger Watch Mode.

Huawei seems to have gone with a charger similar to the one for the original Huawei Watch. It’s not the worst thing in the world, but it’s not good. There’s a specific way to place the watch on the charger, and it reminds us of non-reversible MicroUSB days. Docks, like what the LG Watch Sport uses, are more user-friendly and allow you to simply plop down your watch.

Warranty information, price and availability

In the U.S., Huawei is only selling the Watch 2 Sport. It’s priced at $300 and available from Best Buy, Amazon, Newegg, B&H Photo Video, Jet, Kohls, Target, and Walmart. It comes in three colors: Black, titanium gray, and concrete gray. The LTE version is not available in the United States, but it is sold in the U.K., where the Watch 2 goes on sale in May 2017.

The Sport with 4G, which comes carbon black, costs 380 British pounds, or 330 British pounds without the 4G option. Go for the Classic, in titanium gray, and it’s 410 British pounds. All models will be sold through selected retail stores from May 17, while Amazon has the Watch 2 from May 3.

Huawei’s warranty covers your device for manufacturing defects one year from the date of purchase.

Our Take

Huawei’s Watch 2 Sport is the best Android Wear watch so far. It offers everything you may need from a smartwatch, such as actionable notifications, 4GB of storage for offline music playback, GPS, NFC for Android Pay, Google Assistant, and direct access to the Google Play Store.

While its small screen and lack of a rotating crown may be our least favorite qualities, it redeems itself with Watch Mode, which helps elongate the smartwatch’s battery life up to 25 days.

Is there a better alternative?

Currently, no. The LG Watch Sport is comparable, but it has abysmal battery life and it’s far too bulky and uncomfortable to really recommend.

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However, more Android Wear smartwatches are still being announced, and a lot of them come from fashion brands, so the design should be much nicer. Movado, Tag Heuer, Swarovski, and many more watchmakers are showing off new smartwatches at Baselworld 2017, an annual watch and jewelry trade show this month alone. We recommend you wait to buy the Huawei Watch 2 after you’ve seen what comes out of Baselworld.

How long will it last?

As with most smartwatches, don’t expect to continue using the Huawei Watch 2 Sport for more than two to three years. It may last longer, but you likely won’t see software updates after the two-year mark. Not to mention battery life is likely to get shorter.

Should you buy it?

Yes. If you’re interested in Android Wear and smartwatches in general, the Huawei Watch 2 Sport won’t disappoint. If you own an iPhone, though, you’ll want to buy the Apple Watch Series 2 instead. That being said, you may want to wait a few weeks or even months to look at the upcoming alternatives, because there’s a good chance something better is on the way.

Originally published in March 2017. Updated in 05-08-2017 by Andy Boxall: Added U.K. prices and availability.